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11 Prove that


{x}^(2) + kx + 2 = 0
has real roots if

k \geqslant 2 √(2)
For which other values of k does the equation have real roots?​

User Bradrar
by
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1 Answer

7 votes

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Answer:

  • the discriminant is non-negative for k ≥ 2√2
  • k ≤ -2√2 will also give real roots

Explanation:

The discriminant of this quadratic equation is ...

d = b² -4ac

d = k² -4(1)(2) = k² -8

For real roots, we require ...

k² -8 ≥ 0

k² ≥ 8

|k| ≥ √8 = 2√2

That is, the equation will have real roots when ...

k ≥ 2√2 . . . . . . . what you're asked to show

k ≤ -2√2 . . . . . alternate values of k

User Superuseroi
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4.5k points